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A: Okay. Mary, I think you have something you'd like to say to the class. You wanna hop up and say it?
B: Okay. I'm supposed to say something. Hitting people is wrong even if they're bad. I won't do it again, so don't be afraid of me.
B: There's a lady standing in front of our door. 
C: Who is it?
B: How should I know? I'm seven.
C: That would be your grandmother.
B: Holy shit!
C: So let me guess. Our lovely principal, Ms. Davis.
D: Never get on the bad side of small-minded people who have a little authority. I thought I taught you that.
C: What are you doin' here?
D: You don't think I have the right to see my granddaughter?
C: I do. I'm thrilled your seven-year exhaustive search has finally come to a fruitful conclusion.
D: I don't think this is an appropriate time to talk. So, are you teaching?
C: I repair boats.
D: Please.
C: I'm not bad at it either.
D: Well, then, that explains this. They don't sell sunscreen here?
C: I wear sunscreen.
D: Not enough. And you need a hat. A big hat that shades your face and neck.
C: Okay. I appreciate the advice. I do. But we're not here to talk about sunscreen, are we? 
D: Oh, so no more small talk? That's a shame. Okay. The environment you have created for that child where she lives, the school she attends, it's substandard, every bit of it.
C: I disagree.
D: We're getting nowhere if we're not gonna be honest with each other.
C: I am being honest.
D: I see. Fine. Well, I'm not leaving without her.
C: Well, welcome to Florida.
D: Frank, please listen to reason. At some point, either you're gonna come to the conclusion, or someone in authority is going to spell it out for you that the child's best interest is all that matters.
C: You're gonna make me pull rank, I will. Diane didn't want you to have her.
D: Diane didn't always think things through. And what do you think she'd say if she saw how her child is living now? Do you honestly think she'd be pleased?
C: That she's living a somewhat normal life? Yes. I do.
D: She is not normal. And treating her as such is negligence on a grand scale. I know your heart's in the right place on this. But you are denying the girl her potential. You are. I can provide for her. I can enrich her life.
C: Oh, come on, Evelyn. You're gonna take that girl, you're gonna bury her in tutors...
D: And you'd bury her under a rock. Look, I don't expect you to understand the price you have to pay for greatness.
C: Oh, I do. That's why I have Mary in the first place.
D: That's uncalled for. Your sister had a laundry list of problems. She was weak. Weak like her father and weak like...Well.
C: Now, if it's who I think it is... Kinda puts a black cloud over our luncheon.
D: You're still stubborn and vindictive.
E: You guys ready to order?
D: Here's an idea. Stop thinking about me and you and start thinking about what's best for the child. For any reasonable person, a clear picture will emerge. If it doesn't, I suggest you call your attorney.
F: Okay. Adler, grandmother and uncle. Really? You sure you folks don't wanna go out in the hallway and settle this? No? Well, that's a shame. Mr. Cullen, you are here for the uncle.
G: Yes, sir, Your Honor.
F: For the record, Mrs. Dibbons is representing the State of Florida Child Welfare Department. Proceed.
H: Your Honor, my client, Mrs. Adler is the maternal grandmother of the child. Her daughter, the girl's mother, was a troubled woman who seven years ago, sadly, took her own life. It was at this time that Mr. Adler preemptively and illegally took custody of the girl and spirited her across state lines for the purpose of denying my client custody. Now, there is evidence that the child currently lives in unclean and unwholesome conditions. We petition the court to grant my client full custody of the child so that she may be returned to the state of Massachusetts and given the care to which she is entitled.
G: My client took an infant under his wing for one reason only. It was his sister's desire that he do so. My client has been her constant caregiver. And, Your Honor, as far as the living conditions, I've been in this home. It's fine.
F: All right. Last chance before this starts costing a lot more money.
H: Your Honor, my client would need reasonable access to the child.
F: So ordered. Ms. Dibbons, you'll go over there and check out the living conditions?
J: On the books, Your Honor.
F: All right, folks. Drive carefully.
C: Her lawyer has a nice suit.
G: Relax, Frank. More weight's put on the talent competition. Go have a cocktail, hmm? 
C: Roberta, would you like to have Mary tonight?
K: Why wouldn't I like to have Mary tonight? I told you something like this would happen. Now look where we are. And I'm supposed to believe you know what you're doing. You couldn't even find a white lawyer.
C: Wow. Look, just...Don't worry, okay?
K: Don't tell me that. There's nothing you can say that's gonna make me feel good because I have no say in any of this, Frank. I'm not a blood relative, I'm not a legal guardian. I'm nothing! Just the lady who lives next door, whose opinion means nothing, whose feelings mean nothing. Would I like to have Mary tonight? I'd like to have Mary every night.
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